Transcriptome Analysis Reveals the Important Role of Vitamin B12 in the Response of Natronorubrum daqingense to Salt Stress

Int J Mol Sci. 2024 Apr 10;25(8):4168. doi: 10.3390/ijms25084168.

Abstract

Natronorubrum daqingense JX313T is an extremely halophilic archaea that can grow in a NaCl-saturated environment. The excellent salt tolerance of N. daqingense makes it a high-potential candidate for researching the salt stress mechanisms of halophilic microorganisms from Natronorubrum. In this study, transcriptome analysis revealed that three genes related to the biosynthesis of vitamin B12 were upregulated in response to salt stress. For the wild-type (WT) strain JX313T, the low-salt adaptive mutant LND5, and the vitamin B12 synthesis-deficient strain ΔcobC, the exogenous addition of 10 mg/L of vitamin B12 could maximize their cell survival and biomass in both optimal and salt stress environments. Knockout of cobC resulted in changes in the growth boundary of the strain, as well as a significant decrease in cell survival and biomass, and the inability to synthesize vitamin B12. According to the HPLC analysis, when the external NaCl concentration (w/v) increased from 17.5% (optimal) to 22.5% (5% salt stress), the intracellular accumulation of vitamin B12 in WT increased significantly from (11.54 ± 0.44) mg/L to (15.23 ± 0.20) mg/L. In summary, N. daqingense is capable of absorbing or synthesizing vitamin B12 in response to salt stress, suggesting that vitamin B12 serves as a specific compatible solute effector for N. daqingense during salt stress.

Keywords: Natronorubrum daqingense; extremely halophilic archaea; salt stress; transcriptome analysis; vitamin B12.

MeSH terms

  • Gene Expression Profiling*
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Archaeal
  • Salt Stress*
  • Salt Tolerance / genetics
  • Sodium Chloride / pharmacology
  • Transcriptome
  • Vitamin B 12* / metabolism

Substances

  • Vitamin B 12
  • Sodium Chloride